The Prague Post - Can the US and Russia find a diplomatic 'off-ramp' on Ukraine?

EUR -
AED 4.25718
AFN 80.828375
ALL 98.046763
AMD 444.861288
ANG 2.074565
AOA 1061.844853
ARS 1370.516266
AUD 1.77262
AWG 2.089492
AZN 1.968372
BAM 1.957715
BBD 2.339468
BDT 141.713525
BGN 1.954067
BHD 0.437192
BIF 3450.104927
BMD 1.159219
BND 1.483464
BOB 8.023919
BRL 6.38475
BSD 1.158623
BTN 99.64434
BWP 15.470268
BYN 3.791877
BYR 22720.693174
BZD 2.327397
CAD 1.571756
CDF 3335.073027
CHF 0.939819
CLF 0.028281
CLP 1085.237752
CNY 8.325051
CNH 8.32525
COP 4751.685212
CRC 584.066341
CUC 1.159219
CUP 30.719305
CVE 110.376788
CZK 24.794517
DJF 206.333632
DKK 7.458276
DOP 68.296224
DZD 150.744888
EGP 58.264318
ERN 17.388286
ETB 158.307234
FJD 2.594567
FKP 0.853514
GBP 0.852524
GEL 3.176141
GGP 0.853514
GHS 11.934778
GIP 0.853514
GMD 81.726668
GNF 10039.167517
GTQ 8.904634
GYD 242.409235
HKD 9.099696
HNL 30.240584
HRK 7.532837
HTG 151.627026
HUF 401.046317
IDR 18861.652992
ILS 4.041403
IMP 0.853514
INR 99.590134
IQD 1517.871808
IRR 48803.121303
ISK 143.603907
JEP 0.853514
JMD 184.935705
JOD 0.821915
JPY 166.952472
KES 149.878002
KGS 101.373873
KHR 4638.577837
KMF 494.409352
KPW 1043.297136
KRW 1572.56752
KWD 0.354571
KYD 0.965553
KZT 594.176144
LAK 24994.667372
LBP 103817.858402
LKR 348.868281
LRD 231.738704
LSL 20.613466
LTL 3.422872
LVL 0.701199
LYD 6.28937
MAD 10.553097
MDL 19.813554
MGA 5145.077705
MKD 61.52513
MMK 2434.25309
MNT 4151.450763
MOP 9.368546
MRU 45.872876
MUR 52.454605
MVR 17.857724
MWK 2009.182873
MXN 21.885302
MYR 4.91567
MZN 74.132169
NAD 20.613466
NGN 1792.570036
NIO 42.641347
NOK 11.485809
NPR 159.431344
NZD 1.908114
OMR 0.445721
PAB 1.158643
PEN 4.194667
PGK 4.768789
PHP 65.249545
PKR 328.016962
PLN 4.269577
PYG 9242.962461
QAR 4.237191
RON 5.019184
RSD 117.226026
RUB 91.142814
RWF 1673.151242
SAR 4.349253
SBD 9.676454
SCR 16.479748
SDG 696.105655
SEK 10.960834
SGD 1.482143
SHP 0.910964
SLE 25.56077
SLL 24308.247897
SOS 662.153483
SRD 44.909269
STD 23993.493664
SVC 10.138268
SYP 15072.054435
SZL 20.603979
THB 37.552938
TJS 11.737636
TMT 4.057267
TND 3.419545
TOP 2.715003
TRY 45.63671
TTD 7.865763
TWD 34.103068
TZS 2990.126736
UAH 48.17409
UGX 4177.086355
USD 1.159219
UYU 47.377984
UZS 14784.335666
VES 118.433927
VND 30210.986998
VUV 138.065856
WST 3.036213
XAF 656.605007
XAG 0.031843
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.132847
XDR 0.81987
XOF 656.622017
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.095426
ZAR 20.60513
ZMK 10434.352092
ZMW 28.09773
ZWL 373.268058
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Can the US and Russia find a diplomatic 'off-ramp' on Ukraine?
Can the US and Russia find a diplomatic 'off-ramp' on Ukraine?

Can the US and Russia find a diplomatic 'off-ramp' on Ukraine?

The United States has called for a diplomatic solution with Russia to resolve a crisis over Ukraine, but in public at least, the two powers remain deeply at odds.

Text size:

Secretary of State Antony Blinken will meet Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday in Geneva as tens of thousands of Russian troops remain stationed on Ukraine's borders.

Blinken, on a solidarity visit to Kyiv on Wednesday, called on Moscow to choose the "peaceful path" on Ukraine, with a US official saying the talks in Geneva will explore "diplomatic off-ramps" with Russia.

But Moscow has put forward unusually detailed draft security proposals to which Blinken said he will not formally respond, hoping instead to explore areas of cooperation.

- Arms control path? -

President Joe Biden's administration has said it is willing to look forward with Russia by taking up arms control or agreeing to greater transparency on military exercises.

In initial talks last week in Geneva, Blinken's deputy, Wendy Sherman, proposed a return in substance to the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, a Cold War deal that limited missiles in Europe.

Former president Donald Trump's administration withdrew from the treaty, accusing Moscow of violations.

Blinken said in Kyiv there were "areas where clearly, if there is a will, we could make progress on a reciprocal basis to improve security for everyone".

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, who met with Sherman, appeared positive that Washington was discussing the treaty but regretted that the discussion was tied to Ukraine.

- 'Non-starter' on NATO -

Ryabkov, addressing the Valdai Discussion Club, said Russia wanted legally binding guarantees that NATO will not expand to include Ukraine, a former Soviet republic that has faced a bloody pro-Russia insurgency since 2014.

He called for the formal replacement of the NATO alliance's 2008 Bucharest declaration that opened a path for Ukraine as well as Georgia to join eventually.

"We are seeing a threat from Ukraine becoming more and more integrated into NATO even without becoming a formal member of the organisation. This is what lies at the centre of Russia's security interests," he said.

Blinken called slamming the door on NATO expansion a "non-starter", saying that "one nation can't simply dictate to another its choice."

Bill Taylor, a former US ambassador to Ukraine, doubted there was any way to resolve the differences on NATO.

The Biden administration "has not blinked, despite all the pressure and temptation, and in my view they are not going to blink," said Taylor, now at the US Institute of Peace.

"To do that would be to treat Ukraine not as a sovereign state," he told AFP.

But he said the INF Treaty offered a way forward so long as Putin pulls back from invading.

"If indeed he would like to have a conversation on his security concerns, the United States and NATO have both indicated that they are very willing."

- A new way? -

Despite US statements, few expect Ukraine or Georgia to enter NATO anytime soon, with Europeans in particular loath to commit to defending nations already in conflict with Russia.

In a recent essay, Thomas Graham, a top official under former president George W. Bush, and academic Rajan Menon, suggested a formal moratorium in the accession of Ukraine or any other former Soviet republic for 20 to 25 years.

They wrote in Politico that such a deal would require "lots of imagination and skilled wordsmithing" and face plenty of opposition.

But, they wrote, "Moscow may accept this compromise because it knows that NATO will never agree to an outright ban."

Steven Pifer of the Brookings Institution in an essay noted that any change in the open-door policy would again require consensus -- meaning all 30 NATO members would need to agree with Russia.

But "a middle ground of 'not now but not never' might offer a way to kick this thorny can down the road. That is, if Moscow wishes to defuse the situation."

burs-sct/acl/bp/ach

Z.Marek--TPP